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OK Andy, I'll bite. Lighting loads are generally considered to be
resistive and not inductive. While not perhaps true in some examples, for the subject of this thread I think the nit was picked correctly. For example, if you connect 16 amps of lighting load to a 20 amp fast fuse (or 'Quick Operating' magnetically enhanced circuit breaker) you will have a reliable circuit. If you connect a 16 amp capacity core and coil transformer to that same fuse, or if you connect 16 amps of old style HID lighting with the reactive ballasts acting as inductors, you will pop that fast fuse most of the time in an AC circuit. I think that if in an AC circuit the contact closure is timed exactly as the sine wave crosses the 0 volt line there is sometimes sufficient lag to slow the inrush enough to keep the fuse from popping. That's my theory anyway. If you still don't buy what I am saying, I'm perfectly happy to concede the point. However, the original post implied that motors and incandescent light bulbs require slow-blow fuses. (Many) motors do and incandescent light bulbs do not, so if you are designing an electrical system and the only "Inductive" loads are incandescent it would be fine to use a fast blow fuse in order to protect electronic gear. I guess this brings up another point, if there is more than one fuse certainly the battery fuse or CB could be a slow blow and the fuses at the gear would want to be fast blow in most cases. On Dec 10, 11:39*am, Andy wrote: On Dec 10, 8:44*am, Andy wrote: Sorry wrong nit to pick. *The resistance of an incandescent lamp filament is temperature dependent. *Anyone that has used lamps as current control devices is well aware of this. I suppose I should have completed the information. *The resistance is low when the filament is cold. *There is a large inrush current which reduces as soon as the filament gets hot. Andy |
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